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Van Dam Case Witness Challenges Findings Of Defense 'Bug Expert': But...His Testimony Don't Add Up..
Union Tribune ^ | July 31, 2002 | Jeff Dillion

Posted on 07/30/2002 3:58:51 PM PDT by FresnoDA

Prosecution witness challenges findings of defense 'bug expert'



SIGNONSANDIEGO

July 30, 2002


Union-Tribune
Dr. M. Lee Goff
An insect expert testifying for the prosecution in the David Westerfield case said Tuesday that flies appeared to have colonized Danielle van Dam's body sometime between Feb. 1 and Feb. 14, far earlier than defense witnesses have estimated.

M. Lee Goff, an entomologist and chairman of the Forensic Sciences Department of Chaminade University in Honolulu, said his review of the crime scene photos, morgue photos, weather reports and other evidence suggest that Danielle's body was exposed to insects as early as Feb. 1 and no later than Feb. 14.

 


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  • SDPD detective Maura Parkga says she was actually wearing a red shirt while inside the Westerfield home.
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  • Dr. Lee Goff says, using Singing Hills weather data, testifies that Danielle's body was dumped at the Dehesa site between Feb. 2 and Feb. 12.
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  • Goff says data assumptions used by Haskell would create a shorter timeline for Danielle's post-mortem interval.
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  • Goff says flies don't lay eggs on dry tissue.
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"We're working on an estimate. We're not running a stopwatch here," Goff said.

The defense has contended that there was no way Westerfield could have placed the victim's body where it was found in the East County community of Dehesa, because he was under close surveillance by police beginning Feb. 5.

Goff was called to the stand to rebut testimony from two forensic entomologists called by the defense who testified that Danielle's body could not have been exposed to insects any earlier than mid-February, nearly two weeks after Westerfield came under police surveillance.

Westerfield could face the death penalty if convicted of the kidnap and murder of Danielle. He also has been charged with possession of child pornography.

Danielle was reported missing from her family's Sabre Springs home on Feb. 2. Her body was found in a wooded area near El Cajon on Feb. 27 after a massive search drew national attention.

Westerfield, who lived two doors down from the van Dams, became an early suspect in her disappearance.

 

Insect evidence

When Danielle's naked body was found, investigators took extensive photos of it and its surroundings, then put bags over her head, feet and hands and wrapped the body in a sheet to preserve any evidence.

Law enforcement officials called in forensic entomologist David Faulker to study the signs of insect infestation on the body to try to gauge when Danielle had died.

But lead defense attorney Steven Feldman argued in his opening statement that scientific evidence would prove his client could not have killed Danielle. As it turned out, the prosecution never called Faulker to the stand and he was called by Feldman as a defense witness.

Early in the trial, San Diego County Medical Examiner Brian Blackbourne testified that the girl could have been dead from 10 days to six weeks when her body was found.

Faulkner testified July 10 that his analysis of the life cycles of the insects found on Danielle's body showed it wasn't available to insects until sometime between Feb. 16 and 18.

On July 22, a second defense expert, Dr. Neal Haskell, testified that Danielle's body couldn't have been exposed to flies any earlier than Feb. 12.

 

Insect rebuttal

Prosecutors began rebutting the defense insect evidence on Thursday by calling Dr. William C. Rodriguez III, a forensic anthropologist for the Department of Defense, who testified that Danielle's body was in "an advanced state of mummification" that would have delayed insect infestation.

On Tuesday, Goff reiterated testimony about insect lifecycles presented by the previous experts: You can calculate how long a body has been exposed to the elements by gauging the age of the maggots – fly larvae – growing on the body.

Flies are quickly drawn to dead bodies and will lay batches of eggs on them. The development of the eggs into different stages of larvae and adult flies is then affected by temperature, humidity and other environmental factors.

Using charts of known development rates, a forensic entomologist can look at the age of maggots found on a body and, factoring in the weather, can calculate when the eggs they hatched from had been laid. Generally, the warmer the weather, the faster the insects develop.

Goff, author of "A Fly for the Prosecution: How Insects Help Solve Crimes," said he calculated the "post-mortem interval" date from the maggots on Danielle's body using temperature records and charts from a 2000 fly study.

He said Faulkner appeared to have made his calculations using a chart of insect development from a study that used 80-degree temperatures, far higher than the rates in the San Diego mountains in February.

Haskell appeared to have calculated his dates assuming that the activity of the "maggot mass" on the body would have raised the temperature of the mass, speeding up their development.

In both cases, Goff said, the other entomologists estimated that the maggots would have developed much faster than he did, giving a much later date for the exposure of Danielle's body to the elements.

Goff was scheduled to resume testifying – and to face cross-examination by the defense – after a lunch break.

 

Fiber evidence


DAN TREVAN / Union-Tribune
San Diego Police Department Detective Maura Parga testifies during the trial of David Westerfield Tuesday.
None of the orange shirts worn by the investigators who searched David Westerfield's house after the disappearance of Danielle van Dam could have been the source of the orange acrylic fibers found in Westerfield's laundry and on Danielle's body, a fiber expert said today.

A series of shirts and other orange-colored items brought to the San Diego Police Department crime lab were made from either nylon, cotton or a polyester-cotton blend, criminalist Tanya DuLaney testified.

"Did the fabric of any of these items consist of acrylic in any manner?" assistant prosecutor Woody Clarke asked.

"No," DuLaney replied.

Prosecutors called DuLaney back to the stand in response to defense suggestions that investigators could have inadvertently cross-contaminated the two crime scenes with the orange acrylic fibers, which became a key piece of prosecutor evidence linking Westerfield with Danielle's body.

On June 25, police criminalist Jennifer Shen testified that an orange acrylic fiber tangled in Danielle's plastic necklace at the time her body was found was similar to orange acrylic fibers found in laundry inside Westerfield's home and on bedding in his bedroom.

On July 24, lead defense attorney Steven Feldman introduced into evidence several still images from television that showed police investigators wearing orange or orangish shirts as they entered and left Westerfield's house on Feb. 4 or 5.

In response, the district attorney's office identified all of the police and search-and-rescue personnel shown in the photos, collected anything orange-colored they were wearing at the time and gave the clothing to the crime lab.

That evidence consister of two orange long-sleeved shirts, an orange short-sleeved shirt, four reddish polo shirts, an orange rope, an orange strap, a black-and-red backpack, an orange hat and an orange dog vest, DuLaney said.

Under microscopic and infrared examination, none of the fibers taken from those items contained any acrylic material, DuLaney said.

 

Trial's end in sight

At the start of today's session, Superior Court Judge William Mudd told jurors that there will be no testimony on Wednesday, but that testimony will resume Thursday and could conclude on Monday.

"It appears to me that next week you'll hear closing arguments and be in deliberations," Mudd said.

The judge said that he had not yet decided whether to sequester the jurors during deliberations.

Mudd also warned jurors not to read or view any material about the Westerfield case or the Orange County kidnap-murder of Samantha Runnion, in which the girl's mother blamed a previous jury for failing to convict her daughter's accused murdered in a previous sexual abuse case.

"The fact is the case is not similar in any way, shape or form," Mudd said.



TOPICS: Local News
KEYWORDS: 180frank; crime; danielle; dejackaled; kidnapping; molestation; threadjackals; vandam; westerfield
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To: cyncooper
Heavens to Betsy! That body had been laying out there for one only knows how bloody long. It could have picked up fibers from the Santa Ana winds. The fibers could have been already on the ground before the body was placed there.
Any number of reasons for fibers when a body has been exposed to the outdoors for any long length of time.

Indoors, would be a whole other matter indeed.
501 posted on 07/31/2002 6:05:01 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: BARLF
Thanks for going to the transcripts. I just (hurridly) went to the newspaper article.

502 posted on 07/31/2002 6:06:55 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: the Deejay
You are very welcome.
503 posted on 07/31/2002 6:08:03 PM PDT by BARLF
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To: the Deejay
The ANT did it!
504 posted on 07/31/2002 6:08:57 PM PDT by hoosiermama
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To: BARLF
Put up PDVD's testimony if you've got it at hand - It is like a movie that you watch again and again - each time finding something new.
505 posted on 07/31/2002 6:12:06 PM PDT by mommya
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To: hoosiermama
I was just reading UCANSEE2's pasted testimony & it appears (much like I posted) the body had all kinds of dirt, debris all over it from being exposed to the elements for a long period of time.

Hence, fibers as well, collected on the body. Also, the fibers are only "similar" and could be "similar" to fibers found in just about anyone's home. They are not "unique" fibers from anything "unique" in DW's house or possessions.
506 posted on 07/31/2002 6:13:05 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: mommya
Ok, but I'm a slow typist so hang on.:(
507 posted on 07/31/2002 6:13:38 PM PDT by BARLF
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To: cyncooper
I went back and read the transcript.

It is very hard to tell for sure without seeing what was going on in court,

BUT, my interpretation is that there WAS a HUGE WAD of hair, very dirty/grimy and there were some hairs stuck to the choker with the orange fiber tied to them. I think that your interpretation that a HUGE WAD HAIR had been stuck to her choker isn't right. After her body started decomposing and parts of her scalp were pulled loose by animals, that a wad was there. Maybe stuck to the choker.

None of this (your or my interpretation) clears up how long the hair or fiber could have been stuck to the choker.

SO, my thoughts went this way.......
Little girls tie their hair up with those elastic-cloth covered things. I don't know what they are called.

Could Danielle have had one of those ? Orange fibers ?

508 posted on 07/31/2002 6:16:54 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: All
getting hungry, gotta go til tomorrow.
509 posted on 07/31/2002 6:19:11 PM PDT by UCANSEE2
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To: UCANSEE2
"Little girls tie their hair up with those elastic-cloth covered things. I don't know what they are called."

"Scruncies", I think.
510 posted on 07/31/2002 6:19:22 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: BARLF
Do you know how to cut-n-paste?
511 posted on 07/31/2002 6:21:20 PM PDT by mommya
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To: UCANSEE2
COuld be, But again ist is not relevant if the fiber expert testified they were similar but not mecessarily from the same source. No need to discuss! MUTE topic. Feldmanized!
That's why we're not hearing anymore fiber testimony. Only if source was IDed and tied to a specific DW item is it relevant. Similar source just doesn't do it. Read the Cross exam. I think you'll find that Feldy got her to testify any time, any similar but not identical source. Or something close to that. Stick a for in it!
512 posted on 07/31/2002 6:25:19 PM PDT by hoosiermama
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To: All
PS Burden of prof is in Duseck's corner....He produced no matching item! ANd yes that's why perps destroy evidence. Could have?? IMO Not likely a Condit!
513 posted on 07/31/2002 6:31:49 PM PDT by hoosiermama
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To: mommya
Dusek,Q; Did you have plans for the weekend?A: I originally had plans for the weekend that I cancelled. Q: What were the original plans? A: To go snowboarding with my son. Q: Where were you going to go? A: Big Bear Q: Were you going to go with anyone? A: With--yes. Bill Libby. Q: And anybody-- was he going to bring anybody along? A: His son Derrick and his friend Patrick. Q: How long were you going to go up there for? A: Just a day. Q: What happened to the plans? A: Actually--The court: Take your time. The witness: I believe the original plans to not go with Bill,and we changed the plans to going with Bill on Sunday instead of going on Saturday. It's kinda hazy now.By Mr. Dusek: Q: All right. Do you remember why the trip was delayed a day? A: Because Bill wanted to go Sunday. I think we were going to go alone Saturday, and then Bill wanted to go Sunday. So we changed it to going Sunday with Bill.

Not only am I slow but had an interuption!

514 posted on 07/31/2002 6:31:56 PM PDT by BARLF
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To: hoosiermama
Hi, are you guys still here?
515 posted on 07/31/2002 6:32:54 PM PDT by gigi
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To: hoosiermama
Hoosiermama I'll just point this out in what you think the fiber testimony should be.

One of the lawyers brought out from the fiber witness that he could pluck a fiber from his jacket right there and have her analyze it and the MOST she could say is that the fiber was similar to the fibers in his jacket.

That is the limitation placed on them by the court!

Then common sense takes over and the jury gets to add two and two.

516 posted on 07/31/2002 6:35:25 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: gigi
Took my medicine and need some more.....Any one want to testify to that? Feel like $#!+ That's in secret code! I must be quilty!
517 posted on 07/31/2002 6:35:30 PM PDT by hoosiermama
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To: hoosiermama
I don't know was it tylenol or vicodin?
518 posted on 07/31/2002 6:36:56 PM PDT by gigi
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To: hoosiermama
or tylenol 3 ?
519 posted on 07/31/2002 6:38:31 PM PDT by gigi
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To: hoosiermama
That's why we're not hearing anymore fiber testimony.

AND we just heard fiber testimony yesterday. Feldman tried to pull a fast one and mislead the jury on what the source of the orange fibers could be.

Foiled by Dusek.

520 posted on 07/31/2002 6:40:57 PM PDT by cyncooper
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